On 4/1/22 8:08 AM, Samba.org Admins via samba wrote:> Dear Samba.org list members,
>
> as you might have heard, the pool of IPv4 addresses is exhausted since a
> couple of years already. As a result of that, companies can buy IPv4
> addresses in online auctions and the prices for that are going crazy.
> You can have a look at https://auctions.ipv4.global/prior-sales to see
> the current prices that need to be paid. These days you can get more
> money out of IPv4 address blocks than out of Bitcoin actually. Don't
get
> us wrong, we don't recommend either actually.
>
> Also our hosting provider was forced to raise the prices for our IPv4
> addresses considerably and announced that the prices will be raised even
> more in the near future. We're expecting that we'll soon have to
pay
> more for the IPv4 addresses than we pay for the server hardware itself.
> For that reason we're planning to get rid of the rising costs of the
> deprecated IPv4 addresses.
>
> We're offering all of our services via IPv6 since many years and we
want
> to switch them to IPv6-only in 365 days from now on (2023-04-01) to cut
> the unpredictable costs of IPv4.
>
> Most people already have IPv6. If your provider doesn't offer IPv6 to
> you, you should contact the provider and ask him to enable IPv6 asap.
> You might even ask your money back if you had no IPv6 in the last couple
> of years, because the 10 year old RFC 6540 mandates that IPv6 is a
> must-have for nodes claiming to support IP. In other words, if you
don't
> have IPv6, then you don't have internet access.
>
> We created a web site for you to check if you have working IPv6 support:
>
> https://ipv6-test.samba.org
I don't think this test is working right. It says I see a happy face (it
is gray colored) with a yellow below it. I am pretty sure I don't have
IPv6 support and will not have in many years (Venezuela) but at least my
mail servers have it. So I will be able to access the mailing list.
https://ipv6-test.com/
Says correctly I don't have IPv6 connectivity. What is your test website
doing? checking AAAA resolution from an IPv4 address?
>
> If you see only a sad face, then you have only IPv4 support, if you see
> a sad face covered by a happy face, then you have IPv6, which is good!
>
> Apart from your own internet connection, you should also check that your
> mail provider supports IPv6:
>
> You can *receive* mail if at least one of the MX records of your mail
> address's domain has an IPv6 address assigned.
> https://mxtoolbox.com/MXLookup.aspx can help you to look that up.
>
> For testing if you can *send* mail to IPv6-only mail servers, we've set
> up a test mail domain. If you send a mail to test at ipv6-test.samba.org
> then you should be receiving an immediate mail refuse error while the
> error should contain the text:
>
> 550 You can send mail to an IPv6-only mail server SUCCESSFULLY !
>
> If you got that error, then you can mail to IPv6 domains successfully.
> If you get no error message or if you get any other error message, then
> your mail provider does NOT allow sending to IPv6 domains.
>
> Luckily most mail providers DO support IPv6 these days, but there are
> still some well-known ones which don't. If your mail services depend on
> Yahoo (like yahoo.com), Apple (like me.com, icloud.com, mac.com), gmx,
> web.de, t-online.de, posteo.de, Protonmail, Gandi, Mimecast, Zoho or
> Rackspace hosting, then you will be out-of luck probably.
>
> We believe that providers who still don't support IPv6 in the year
2022,
> have been sleeping at least for 10 years. If your provider is one of the
> sleeping ones, you can try to wake him up (good luck!) to be able to
> keep on using our services after we disabled deprecated IPv4.
>
> If your provider doesn't wake up (quite likely if he slept till now!),
> then we recommend to switch to a provider that does support full
> internet access, which includes IPv6 of course.
>
> In case you lack IPv6 in your corporate network, then ask yourself if
> you acknowledged the work of the networking team enough in the past. Buy
> them a coffee or a bottle of wine when asking them kindly to enable IPv6.
>
> We are aware that in *very* rare cases someone might live in a country
> like Greenland, where it's not possible to find a provider with IPv6
> support. In cases like that the friendly guys from HE still give you a
> possibility to use IPv6, see http://tunnelbroker.net/
>
> Side note: Also github still doesn't support IPv6 and doesn't show
any
> sign to improve this
> (https://github.community/t/github-com-not-reachable-via-ipv6/216624) -
> samba.org switched to gitlab, which DOES support IPv6. We think that
> nobody should deal with service providers that don't support IPv6 these
> days.
>
> Please don't discuss this further here on the list (we'll ignore
any
> list replies); but you can send any feedback (both positive and
> negative) to go-ipv6 at samba.org. We'll consider your feedback for our
> future plans.
>
> Your Samba Admins
>